Balance £25.00

How it works

PRIZERUN is a prize draw settled by real racing. You make no prediction and no selection — your horse is drawn for you.

1 · Buy a £5 ticket on any race

Every race on today's GB & Irish cards is open until the off. One price, always £5, paid from your balance.

2 · Your horse is drawn at random

The moment you buy, one horse from the full declared field is allocated to your ticket at random. Every ticket in a race has an identical chance: 1-in-N, where N is the number of runners. You can't pick, and neither can we.

3 · First past the post, fixed prize

If your horse wins on the official result, your ticket pays a fixed prize — credited to your balance the moment the result is official. Every ticket is £5; the slider chooses how it's shaped, from one horse up to five different horses:

The exact prize for every setting is shown before you buy, and every setting returns the same 50p-in-the-pound prize fund — the slider trades prize size for coverage, never value.

Worked example — 3.45 Ripon, 12 runners.
Ticket £5 · your chance 1-in-12 · prize 12 × £2.50 = £30.
An 8-runner race pays £20 at 1-in-8. A 16-runner race pays £40 at 1-in-16.

4 · The 9.30 Night Draw — £250, every day

Every horse you held today — winner or not — is automatically a chance in the Night Draw at 9.30pm, where one entry from the whole day wins £250. A single is one chance, a five-pack is five, a postal entry is one: every entry in every race counts, so no ticket is ever completely done until half nine.

Somebody wins every race

Ticket allocation covers the full field in rotation (see Fairness), so once a race has at least as many tickets as runners, the winning horse is always held. Every result pays real winners.

Entry limit

Maximum 5 entries per person per race, however entered — the limit applies identically to paid tickets and free postal entries, counted together. Entries beyond the limit are void (paid entries refunded).

Non-runners and dead heats

If your horse is declared a non-runner, choose a full refund or a fresh random horse from the remaining field. Dead heats pay every winning ticket in full. Void races refund all tickets.

Withdrawals

Your balance is yours — winnings can be withdrawn to your bank at any time from £5, free, with no conditions attached.

Why this is a prize draw, not betting

Betting means choosing an outcome, staking money on that choice at odds, and being paid according to those odds. None of that happens here. You make no prediction and no selection — your horse is allocated to you at random, the same way a name is pulled from a hat in an office sweepstake. The ticket price is fixed, the prize is fixed and printed before you buy, and the race result is simply the mechanism that selects which entries win — like numbered balls in a draw machine. That is the legal anatomy of a sweepstake, which UK law treats as a form of prize draw, not betting. And because every draw carries a genuinely free postal entry route with identical odds and prizes, PRIZERUN operates as a free draw under Schedule 2 of the Gambling Act 2005 — the same framework used by free prize draws across the UK — rather than as a licensed betting product.

To be clear about what this is not saying: chance still decides who wins, and you should only ever spend what you'd happily spend on any entertainment. The differences below are about structure, transparency and consumer protection — the table shows exactly where a PRIZERUN ticket differs from a bet, a lottery ticket and a typical prize competition.

PRIZERUNBookmaker betLotteryPrize competition
Do you choose your selection? No — allocated at random, so there's nothing to predict and no skill or judgement rewarded or punished Yes — you pick and your judgement is the bet You pick numbers, but they don't matter Sometimes — often a skill question
Is there a stake at odds? No — fixed £5 ticket, prize printed before you buy Yes — winnings depend on odds set by the operator No — fixed ticket, variable jackpot No — fixed entry, fixed prize
Do you know your exact prize before entering? Yes — shown on every race before purchase Only if odds don't move; payout varies with the bet No — jackpots and shares vary Yes — usually
Are your chances stated plainly? Yes — 1-in-N printed on every race, same for every ticket Implied by odds, shaped by the bookmaker's margin Published, but very long (millions to one) Rarely — depends on entry volume
Is the prize fund published? Yes — 50p of every £1 goes to prizes, on every race, stated on our Fairness page No — the margin is built into the odds Yes — set by licence Rarely
Can you enter completely free with equal odds? Yes — every race, by post, same draw, same prizes No No Usually — required for the same exemption
Can one event cost you more than the ticket? Never — £5 is the most a ticket can ever cost you Your stake is lost on every losing bet, and re-staking chases losses No No
Withdrawal conditions? None — winnings withdrawable from £5, no wagering requirements Bonuses often carry wagering requirements None Varies
Regulatory basis Free prize draw, Schedule 2, Gambling Act 2005 — licence-exempt because entry is free by post UKGC betting licence UKGC lottery licence / National Lottery Act Usually Schedule 2, like ours

General characteristics of each category, for orientation — individual operators vary. Whatever the structure, only ever spend what you can comfortably afford; see Play safe.

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